Title: Motivation to Hate
1Motivation to Hate
- Lindsay Maloney
- Anne Whitted
- Catherine Stauffer
- Lauren Pylant
2WARNING!!!
- Material may contain offensive images!
3Researching hate
- Can one research hate?
- We think no.
- You cannot see hate through a brain scan
- It is not like dissecting a pill or performing
brain surgery - How can one measure it?
- How can you feel anothers hate?
- Other than an action they perform against you
4HATE
- Have you ever hated someone?
- If so, have you ever acted on it?
- What drove you to do so?
- Alcohol, cheating spouse, betrayal, etc
5Statistics
- http//www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0004885.html
6Definitions of Hatred
- Intense dislike or extreme aversion or hostility
- A feeling so intense it demands action
- Stems from fear, animosity, anger, or sense of
injury, JEALOUSY
7Is it easier to love or to hate?
- LOVE?
- Is difficult and hard to explicate
- People see love as
- Sissy
- Embarrassing
- Not Macho
8Is it easier to Love or to Hate?
- HATE?
- Hate is easy arousingappealingand it generates
listeners and ratings - Once hate emotions are ignited, further fanning
the flames is easy, and soon clear thinking and
reason seem far less satisfying than venting this
anger and hatred, and even striking out with
violence - I can only feel better about my own plight by
putting down other people. - The only way I can feel adequate is by aligning
myself with a group that crusades against some
inferior, immoral, or evil entity - It is said that hate is not the opposite of love,
but rather fear!
9Do People create the activist or does the
Activist create the People
- Root of Hitlers hatred for Jews
- Nazis were jealous of the Jews riches and
businesses - Hitler absorbed some of his parents racism for
Jews - 4 out of the 7 professors that rejected him from
Vienna Academy of Fine Arts, were Jewish - As a leader he dictated fear into his followers
so they would not step out of line
10Is Hatred Innate or Learned?
- Innate
- Aristotle believed
- A person can choose to like or dislike a person
We can prove people to be friends or enemies - Moral virtues are prepared by our nature as human
beings, but believed that our social environment
and upbringing can influence how these virtues
are used in life. - Bandura
- Argued that humans learn aggression by observing
payoffs from aggressive actions - Helps them obtain what they are seeking, creates
submissiveness and gets attention - Whether or not they act on this depends on their
anticipated consequences
11Is Hatred Innate or Learned?
- Learned
- Freud
- Believed aggression stems from redirected energy
from a humans primitive death urge - Instinctually, aggressive energy builds up until
it can be released by a stimulus
12Review
- Difficulties of researching hate
- Definitions of hatred
- Is it easier to love or to hate
- Is hatred innate or learned
- Do people create the activist or does the
activist create the people
13Racial and Religious Hatred Act 2006
- Aims to extend the current offence of incitement
to racial hatred to include stirring up hatred
based on peoples religious belief, bringing all
religions under the same level of protection
14Throughout time has hatred increased or decreased?
- Hatred is more publicized now then in past,
- Moved from radio to television viewing
- newspaper, television, books, video, etc
- Manipulation of proof for people who act on hate
15Has hatred changed?
- More groups developed
- Ignorance
- Human rights
- Immigration
16Prevalence of Antigay Aggression among a College
Sample
- Dr. Karen Franklin
- 500 young adults in San Francisco all reported
some sort of physical violence and threats
against people they believed were homosexual - 24 antigay name calling
- 18 physical threats
- 32 name calling
17Psychosocial Motivations of Hate Crime
Perpertrators
- Self-Defense
- Responding to aggressive behaviors of others
- For example
- 9/11 terrorist attacks on US
- Husband abusing wife (or vice versa)
- Curb stomp (American History X)
18Psychosocial Motivations
- Thrill Seekers
- Commit acts of hatred in order to alleviate
boredom, to have fun and excitement, and to feel
strong - Examples
- Some bullies
- Hannibal
19Psychosocial Motivations
- Peer dynamics
- In order to prove their toughness to the other
peers in their social groups - Examples
- Followers
- Gangs (prison)
- Hate Groups (KKK)
20Psychosocial Motivations of Hate Crimes
Perpetrators
- Ideology assailants reported that they assaulted
gay men and lesbians because of their attitudes
about homosexuality - View themselves as social norm enforcers
- Do not object so much to homosexuality itself but
to visible challenges - Public flaunting
- Sexual deviance
- Male effeminacy
21Active Hate Groups
- There are many hate groups in NC
- Many are unknown to society
- Here are a few that are known
22Consequences
- Death
- War
- Betrayal
- Starvation
- Suffering
- Fear
23Hate Learned can be Unlearned
- Leading experts on child development argue that
the problem begins in early preschool. - Preschool children already learn stereotypes or
acquire many negative attitudes - The process of countering those negatives with
positives begins at an early age.
24Physiological effects of Hatred
- Emotions begin inside the amygdala
- the part of the brain responsible for identifying
threats, and for sending out an alarm when
threats are identified - An additional brain neurotransmitter and hormone,
adrenaline is released which trigger a lasting
state of arousal - However, most often the emotions of rage are
stopped before getting out of control - The prefrontal cortex can switch off the emotions
in proportion - If the amygdala handles emotion, the prefrontal
cortex handles judgement
25Physiological effects of hate
- Heart beat increases
- Blood pressure rises
- Rate of breathing increases
- Heightened senses
- Yelling
- Animated and exaggerated body movement
- Tense muscles
- Impotence
- Passive-aggressive behavior
- Envy
- Jealousy
- Depression
- Sleeplessness
26Bullying
- Is a persistent unwelcome behavior, mostly using
unwarranted or invalid criticism - Is obsessive and compulsive
- HAS TO HAVE someone to bully and appears to be
unable to survive without a current target - Why do people bully
- To avoid facing up to their inadequacies and
doing something about it - To avoid accepting responsibility for their
behavior and the effect it has on others - To reduce their fear of being seen for what and
who they really are - To divert attention away from their inadequacy
27Links
- www.harvard.edu/cyberlaw Matthew Shepard
- http//www.infoplease.com Hate crime statistics
on lesbians and homosexual men - http//hate-crime.website-works.com hate crime
statistics by police - http//www.adl.org/hate-patrol/kkk.asp - about
the KKK - http//www.bullyonline.org/workbully/bully.htm -
what is bullying? - http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hate -
- what is the definition of HATE?
- Physiological symptoms of Hate/aggression
- www.youtube.com
- American History X
- Nazi death camps
- http//projects.jou.ufl.edu Is hate learned or
Instinctual? - What leads to hate crimes
28Motivations behind the Killing of Matthew Shepard
- Do you think that this was a hate crime?
- Kristen Price changed her story three times
- Why?
- What story do you believe?
- Gay and Lesbian advocacy groups and the media
point to Matthews death as a vivid example of
the consequences of intolerance and disrespect.
29Motivations behind the killing of Matthew Shepard
- Drugs and Money
- Aaron had a serious methamphetamine habit by the
age of 18 - Aaron had planned to rob a drug dealer
- Was unable to do so and then decided later to
ONLY rob Matthew Shepard
30Motivations behind the Killing of Matthew Shepard
- Gay Hate Crime
- Aaron remembers that at one point Shepard reached
over and grabbed his leg - A petition was made to build a monument with
Shepards picture and the words Matthew Shepard,
Entered Hell October 12, 1998 in Defiance of
Gods Warning Thou shalt not lie with mankind
as with womankind it is abomination. Leviticus
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